Mac given his orders . must join common market , says Kennedy . daily worker reporters . President Kennedy renewed his pressure on Mr Harold Macmillan to join the common market during their talks at Admiralty House , Whitehall , yesterday . much of their three hours , 20 minutes of discussion is believed to have been devoted to this main point of American policy . it arose during talks following President Kennedy &apos;s report to the British Prime Minister of the outcome of his recent visit to Paris . there General de Gaulle had made clear that he would accept Britain into the common market only if there were no conditions laid down to meet the commonwealth and other reservations . Mr Kennedy told Mr Macmillan that he still wanted him to apply for membership of the common market , even if it meant an unconditional surrender . Laos , Berlin . there were also brief discussions on Laos , Berlin and other foreign questions , after Mr Kennedy had informed Mr Macmillan of his discussions with Mr Krushchov . with the exception of 40 minutes when Lord Home , foreign Secretary , and Mr McGeorge Bundy , the President &apos;s special assistant for security affairs , were brought in , the two men talked alone . an attempt to get more information about the Admiralty House meeting will be made in the House of Commons this afternoon . labour M.P.s already have many questions to the Prime Minister asking for a statement . President Kennedy flew from London Airport last night to arrive in Washington this morning . he is to make a 30-minute nation-wide broadcast and television report on his talks with Mr Krushchov this evening . communique . the joint communique on Mr Kennedy &apos;s and Mr Macmillan &apos;s third talks - the first were at Key West , Florida , the second in Washington - said : their discussions covered the major problems , both economic and political , and revealed once again the close agreement of the two governments in pursuing their common purposes . occasion was given to review the need for economic co-operation and expansion in the general interests of developed and underdeveloped countries alike . it said that the President and Premier noted with satisfaction the agreement in Vienna on the need for an effective Laos ceasefire , which should lead to progress toward a Laos agreement at the Geneva conference . particular attention was also given to the nuclear tests conference and to the question of disarmament . the situation in regard to Germany was reviewed , and there was full agreement on the necessity of maintaining the rights and obligations of the allied governments in Berlin . apart from their formal Admiralty House talks , followed by lunch given by Lady Dorothy Macmillan with Mrs Kennedy and other guests present , Mr Kennedy and Mr Macmillan met three more times yesterday . pessimistic . in Paris , Mr Dean Rusk , U.S Secretary of state , gave a 90-minute briefing on the Vienna talks to the 15-nation Nato council . some of his listeners said he was rather pessimistic and talked of a Berlin crisis later this year . from Nato headquarters Mr Rusk went to see President de Gaulle and informed him of the Vienna outcome . last night Mr Rusk arrived in London in time to join the Buckingham Palace dinner and to fly home with the President . in Duesseldorf , Chancellor Adenauer said the Vienna talks might be the beginning of a slight improvement , but no big changes should be expected in the political situation . Mr K gets home in high spirits . relaxed , smiling and clearly in the best of spirits , Mr Krushchov yesterday returned to Moscow after his two days of talks with President Kennedy , writes Dennis Ogden from Moscow . the good beginning made at Vienna must be followed up by new efforts for peace , the Soviet communist party newspaper Pravda declared yesterday . events in Vienna gave hope to people of goodwill who hate the cold war , and to all who are striving for a stable peace , write the paper &apos;s two correspondents from the Austrian capital . good beginning . thinking over the results of the Vienna meeting , peace-loving people will say a good beginning . Mr Krushchov remained at the airport to join President Brezhnev in welcoming Dr Sukarno , President and Prime Minister of Indonesia , who arrived by Boeing 707 jet on a state visit 40 minutes after Mr Khrushchov had arrived from Vienna . a cheering , delighted crowd of Indonesian students broke through crash barriers to surround their President on the tarmac for several minutes , chanting his name and waving flowers . farewell speech . in Vienna , before flying off to Moscow , Mr Khrushchov said he hoped his weekend talks with President Kennedy would help to establish an enduring peace between nations . replying to a farewell speech from Austrian President Schaerf , the Soviet Premier thanked Austria for the hospitality and welcome he had received . the Soviet Union has always striven and is striving to safeguard an enduring peace for the peoples , to secure an early solution of the disarmament problem , and to bring about a peaceful settlement of international disputes through negotiations , he said . Gaitskell defends Polaris , NATO and himself . from George Sinfield . Hastings , Monday . Mr Gaitskell today delivered a full-blooded defence of the Polaris missile base . and by implication he supported the establishment of sites in Britain for the training of German troops . his main theme was that nuclear weapons were necessary to defend Britain , that Britain must depend on Nato and the west must have nuclear weapons so long as the Soviet Union has them . addressing the annual congress of the national union of general and municipal workers , he said he felt sure the labour movement was coming round in support of his views . obviously conscious of the fierce and widespread resentment over the U.S Polaris base in Britain , Mr Gaitskell said that he even noticed that supporters of unilateral nuclear disarmament were changing their tactics by switching most of their emphasis on to the missile . Mr Gaitskell said that a member of an alliance could not deny facilities to nations to which it was allied . but governments should be free to negotiate and refuse proposals with which they did not agree . outdated Thor . the labour party opposed Thor missiles , because , he said , they were out of date and vulnerable and would attract enemy action . that argument did not apply to the Polaris submarine . so long as the Soviet Union had nuclear weapons , the west , somewhere , must have them too . it was far better for a weapon used for retaliatory purposes to be under the sea rather than on land . this was why the labour party did not think it right to oppose the Polaris depot ship . the party agreed that it was unwise to locate the base in the Holy Loch , only 30 miles from Glasgow , a city with two million people . it should be sited in a more remote area . Mr Gaitskell added that the Scarborough conference decisions did not , in his view , truly reflect the opinions of the majority of party members and still less the party &apos;s supporters in the country . he was afraid lest the decisions would mean the labelling of the party at a future general election that it did not care about the defence and security of our country . after saying that Mr Khrushchov believed Russian power to retaliate had stopped a U.S attack upon the Soviet Union , Mr Gaitskell said that what stopped the Russians in the last resort from aggressive nuclear war was the certainty that they would be annihilated . Mr Gaitskell added that agreement with the unilateralists was not possible , though he respected their views . he saw by reports that those who organise these things were recommending the supporters of unilateral nuclear disarmament to shift the emphasis of their intervention away from straight opposition to the official document on to opposition to the Polaris base . nuclear spread . to Mr Macmillan , Mr Gaitskell said the Prime Minister should begin to take seriously the danger of the spread of nuclear weapons within the Nato alliance . let us say to Macmillan that he should press , I hope with the agreement of Kennedy , in talks with the Soviet Union , for the establishment in central Europe of a zone of controlled disarmament . he thought , he said , that the Soviet Union would be prepared to reach an agreement on a zone of controlled disarmament in Europe . Mr Gaitskell concluded , declaring that the present was the beginning of a great period of opportunity for the party . it was a great chance that should be grasped . inter-union jealousies prevent the fulfilment of a common policy for wages and other major questions , Mr Jack Cooper , president , declared when Congress opened . gap widened . he complained that the gap between earnings of manual workers in local government , compared with the average in all industries for men over 21 , had widened over the past ten years from 34 s to 73 s a week . Mr Cooper suggested that the distortion arose from enhanced payments agreed at local level . local negotiations and bargaining by branch officers and shop stewards had come to stay and some way must be found to integrate and co-ordinate their activities in official negotiating machinery . the general council of the trades union congress should therefore consider the matter . consideration should also be given to the regrouping of unions and the modification of their structures to meet the growing concentration of capital . common benefits . Mr Cooper argued that a common industrial contribution was urgent - particularly in unions serving workers in the same industry - along with common benefits paid during strikes and lock-outs . suggesting that a total T.U.C membership of eight million was a poor show compared with some countries , he argued that the position needed examination . take Polaris away letter . Russell plea to President . daily worker reporter . before President Kennedy met Mr Macmillan yesterday morning he was given the views of a wide section of the British people about Polaris submarine bases in this country . an open letter written by Earl Russell hoping that the President &apos;s visit to London will prove fruitful was handed in at the American embassy by representatives of the committee of 100 . Earl Russell , President of the committee of 100 , told Kennedy that he should take notice of that very large and growing section which is opposed to the establishment of a Polaris base , whether at Holy Loch or elsewhere on British territory . he pointed out that already there have been protests but that very much larger protests are to be expected and are being planned . there are three kinds of reasons that justify the protests and these should carry weight with the U.S government , Earl Russell suggested . the first of these reasons is the importance of preserving the hitherto cordial relations between the U.S and Great Britain , not only in government circles , but in public opinion . Earl Russell says it is inevitable , though profoundly regrettable , that the agitation against the Polaris base has generated some antagonism to the policy of the United States . the second reason is concerned with doubts as to the safety of the people of Great Britain ; in a time of crisis it would probably be impossible for the British authorities to exercise any degree of control over the action of Polaris submarines . in an hour . he argues that there is a distinct possibility that so long as there is a Polaris base in Britain the Soviet Union might retaliate against Britain alone . such retaliation might , and probably would , destroy the whole population of Britain in the course of , at the most , an hour without provoking American retaliation . Earl Russell believes : it is very questionable whether British membership of Nato and British permission of American bases on our territory add anything to the strength of America , while , on the contrary , they impose upon America an onerous obligation which it may prove impossible to fulfil . the third reason is that the supreme interest for the whole world - east and west and uncommitted nations - is the prevention of nuclear war . a rapidly growing body of opinion in this country believes that Britain could be more effective in preventing a nuclear war as a neutral by helping to suggest agreements which could be accepted by both east and west . 